Reading Out, Reaching Out Dan Holloway London Author Fair

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1 Intro Reading Out, Reaching Out Dan Holloway London Author Fair What do people say is the most important thing for writers to learn/do? At this winter s self-publishing summit Give readings Build communities of loyal fans What s the fastest growing/most vibrant part of the literary world? Not self-publishing or ebooks but spoken word An ever-expanding line-up of highly popular regular spoken word events such as Hammer & Tongue and Bang Said the Gun Spoken word artist Hollie McNish achieved over 1 million YouTube hits in just a few days in 2013 with her poem Mathematics The inaugural Ted Hughes Prize, a major 5000 award, went to performance poet Kate Tempest New publisher Burning Eye Books has taken off dramatically in 18 months as a press dedicated to publishing spoken word artists My history I guess I was naïve when I started self-publishing, not really knowing many others who were doing it at the time other than the close group of friends I had at the Year Zero collective, which 22 of us had started up in January 2009 in protest at the publishing world s lack of opportunities for new literary fiction, and Guy Gonzalez of Digital Book World, who when he wasn t talking digital publishing was one of the US leading slam poets. So I didn t really know that writing was writing and other stuff was, well, other stuff. What I knew was that I loved indie rock music, the musicians I d met at gigs shared pretty much exactly the same artistic ethos as I did, that one of the writers I respected, and still do respect, most in the world, Marc Nash, used to work at the iconic Rough Trade in Brick Lane, and that one of my good friends James Rhodes was currently taking pops at the Classical music scene by making his concerts more gig-like and doing rather well out of it thank you. Which meant, when I came to organise the launch of my first book, which was to be my first ever reading, it seemed like the most natural thing in the world to get in touch with my favourite acoustic musician (I had at least figured out that fully-amped and bookshop wasn t a match made in heaven, though that would change in time ), the wonderful Jessie Grace. I borrowed a trick from James and made a minimalist and beautifully laid out set of A5 programme notes, and Jessie and I split the night between us, each with two fifteen minute sets, alternating music and reading. I should add, for those of you who only know me as a performance poet, this was a long time before I discovered poetry. This was prose at its prosaic prosiest.

2 More than 60 people turned up that night, some of them to see Jessie and some of them to see me. She sold CDs, not all of them to people who had come to see her. I sold books, not all of them to people who had come to see me. Which meant I never unlearned the fact that it made perfect sense for writers to share the floor with people from other arts. My next event, held at Rough Trade, featured three writers and three music acts (including Jessie), and it went from there. Reading Nothing cements your story, and you, in someone s mind quite so much as hearing it straight from your mouth, read with every ounce of the passion that drove you to write it in the first place. What to read The very best reading will do three things: hold the audience s attention from start to finish make the audience desperate for more showcase all your talents A great reading, to do all of these should: Be short. 8 minutes is the longest you can possibly keep an audience rapt. 5 minutes is about right for prose. You can, of course, do more than one 5 minute piece during an evening. Show all your talents however experimental your style, the best readings have a clear narrative arc, and will demonstrate your skills at pacing, description, and dialogue. A short story will usually accomplish these better than a novel excerpt. Rehearse. Lots. And then more. How to Read Go to the venue in advance. Stand/sit where you ll be standing/sitting for the reading. Get to know the layout of the room so you feel comfortable there. When you do that, pick an object in the room, close to where the audience will be, to read to. That way you won t be distracted by not knowing where to look. Figure out in advance what to do with your spare hand. Holding a book in one hand really is distracting in a way that you won t realize until you get there and feel this thing waving around by your side. Practice an action, hold something, even put it in your pocket, but plan what you ll do.

3 Learn to breathe from your diaphragm, and learn breath control so that you only ever have to breathe on the commas and full stops. EXAMPLE If you only invest in one thing, make it an acting lesson. Don t worry if you re nervous. You will be. You certainly should be. That s because you care and want to give your audience a fabulous time. If you have done all of the above, you will have maximized your chance of being able to work through the nerves and channel them into giving a great performance. This is why you need to do all these things in advance (and especially learn your breath control), because when they confront a nervous you they can send your mind in a hundred directions. If you know the space, and are comfortable with your actions and your material, that won t happen. And practically: Ensure that you have water. Ask the venue but bring your own in case. Always have cards/bookmarks with you. Bring enough books, and check the sales arrangements with the venue. Bookstores may want to check your books in as stock and then take their discount. That, after all, is how they make their living, and doing what the venue likes is courteous and the key to a long-term relationship. Bring a piece of paper for your mailing list and actively pass it around the audience. Have a friend in the audience that you trust to be honest to give you feedback and ideally to film you so that you can learn for next time.

4 Collaborating Pooling resources amongst the like-minded but different skilled: Collectives Chill Pill, a leading collective of performance poets Triskele, a collective of self-published writers who help each other with marketing, formatting, editing, design, each member filling other members skill gaps Collaborating across the arts Expanding yourself creatively It widens our creative horizons and expands our creative vocabulary. It expands our network of brilliant creative people. - music put on a night where the performance is split between writers and musicians - artists you will find a series of slides from my collaboration Lilith Burning with Katelan Foisy. Katelan is a writer/artist/model/photographer. She went in costume as Lilith, the mythological first wife of Adam, and strong feminine archetype. We went round Oxford and took photos of people s reactions to her, from tourists to shopkeepers. Then we made those photos into an artwork and invited everyone we d met back to a local bookstore that evening where they could look at what we d done, listen to readings about Lilith, and listen to music. - I have a longstanding collaboration with photographer Veronika von Volkova, who works not just on covers with me but on multidisciplinary art and poetry - Lucy Furlong s Amniotic City, a psychogeographic poetry map of London s hidden feminine architecture is an incredible example of working across the arts to create something that wouldn t be possible using just one medium - Verse Kraken is a project that combines poetry and art and residential workshops - Tongue Fu is a regular evening where performance poets and musicians feed off each other in live shows - Penning Perfurmes was an Arts Council supported national initiative that saw poets create work based on perfumes and perfumers create scents based on poetry. Creatively speaking I have found myself learning things and taking steps I could never have imagined through my collaborations. Expanding your fanbase Our taste in literature isn t just about our taste in literature. It reflects a fundamental part of us, the same part of us that also expresses itself through a love of certain music and certain art. And many people who love the same music and art as us do so because it reflects a fundamental part of them that also expresses itself in the kind of literature we write.

5 Key is to maintain a consistent feel/ethos between all the artists involved and everything you create, so that those who appreciate one part of what you re doing will appreciate the others. It gives our existing fans something truly valuable by exposing them to other things they will love. It brings our work to whole new audiences, many of whom will then become part of our fanbase. It creates all sorts of possibilities for producing interesting collaborative merchandise!